Reuters Health Information: Death after surgery three times more likely in lower-income countries
Death after surgery three times more likely in lower-income countries
Last Updated: 2016-05-12
By Kathryn Doyle
(Reuters Health) - How many people survive after emergency
surgery is one measure of the quality of care they have access
to, and post-surgery death rates in low- and middle-income
countries suggest quality needs to be better, researchers say.
Using mortality rates within 24 hours and 30 days after
emergency abdominal surgery as a measure, the study covered 58
countries and found risk of death was three times higher in
low-income compared to high-income nations.
"Safety practices at the time of surgery are now embedded in
high-income settings, which have the resources to plan and
deliver them," said study coauthor Dr. Aneel Bhangu, from the
University of Birmingham in the U.K.
"They are less routinely used in low and middle income
countries, due to a lack of resources and training in safety
cultures," which may include equipment sterility, availability
of antibiotics, and type of skin preparation used at the time of
surgery, he told Reuters Health by email.
"Around the time of surgery, lack of critical care
facilities and imaging due to resources may also affect outcome
adversely," Bhangu said.
For the study, 357 medical centers reported data on more
than 10,000 patients receiving emergency abdominal surgery over
a six-month period in 2014, not including women undergoing
cesarean section. Many surgeries involved the appendix or
gallstones.
Sixty percent of the patient records collected came from
high-income countries like the U.S., U.K. and Sweden, while the
rest came from middle-income countries like Egypt and low-income
countries like Mozambique.
There were 174 deaths within 24 hours of surgery and 404
deaths within the following 30 days. In the first 24 hours,
mortality rates were about 1 percent in high-income countries, 2
percent in middle-income countries and 3.4 percent in low-income
countries. By the 30-day mark, mortality rates were 4.5 percent,
6 percent and 8.6 percent, respectively.
Trauma leading to surgery was more common in lower income
countries, according to the results in the British Journal of
Surgery, May 4.
"There is a lack of safe and affordable surgery in low- and
middle-income countries," Bhangu said.
"This means that patients can take some days to get to
hospital, or may choose to avoid medical treatment in the first
instance due to cost," he said. "In total, this may be creating
the situation where diseases are more advanced when the patient
reaches the operating theatre."
Some strategies, like using a surgical safety checklist, may
be effective in high and low-income settings, or may be a marker
of safer hospital systems, he said.
"Given the lack of essential resources and immediate
availability of highly trained providers of all cadres,
including technicians, nurses, physician's assistants,
physicians and surgeons, surgery is more dangerous in many
low-income countries than it is in higher income countries,"
said Dr. Barclay Stewart of the University of Washington in
Seattle, who was not part of the new study.
"We all must advocate for greater global attention on the
extreme inequity that is represented by the lack of emergency
and surgical care in low-income countries," Stewart told Reuters
Health by email. "This is particularly true for those of us who
work in the global health community, which is often focused on
highly politicized conditions that exact a lesser toll on
societies than conditions that require emergency and surgical
care."
Living in richer countries is associated with increased
survival in general, not just for emergency surgery, said Dr.
Mark G. Shrime, director of research in the Program in Global
Surgery and Social Change at Harvard Medical School in Boston
who also was not part of the new study.
Currently, 5 billion people around the world don't have this
sort of access to available, safe, affordable and timely care,
Shrime told Reuters Health by email, "and, of those who do, 80
million people impoverish themselves every year trying to get
surgery."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1NqTkqG
Br J Surg 2016.
|